Mission Statement
The mission of
the Texas Two-Year College Choral Directors Association (TTCCDA) is
to provide a large-ensemble choral-performance opportunity under the
direction of a nationally-recognized conductor for students enrolled
in two-year college music programs in the state of Texas. Students
take
part in
a structured audition process in their respective regions and are then
recommended for participation by members of the TTCCDA. The end product
of this effort is the Texas Two-Year College All-State Choir (TTCASC),
presented in conjunction with the Vocal Division of the Texas Music
Educators
Association annual convention in San Antonio each February.
A Brief History of the Texas Two-Year College All-State Choir
by Tenesa Rasmussen
The Texas Two-Year College All-State Choir (TTCASC) was born as a festival
chorus that sang for the Texas Two-Year College Teachers Association
Convention. In 1973, its directors voted to establish a festival independent
from the TTCTA Convention, and invited Dr. George Lynn from Colorado
to serve as clinician. The goals of the then-named Texas Junior College
Choral Festival (TJCCF) were to provide community and junior college
students the opportunities to perform larger choral works than would
be possible locally, to sing in a large choir, and to glean experience
and inspiration from distinguished conductors.
For twenty-five years, the Festival venues shifted yearly, hosted by
colleges in all parts of Texas. Eventually, through the perseverance
of dedicated directors and inspiration from renowned clinicians such
as Weston Noble, Rene Clausen, Joseph Flummerfelt, Eph Ehly, Charlene
Archibeque, and Jo-Michael Scheibe, the two hundred-voice choir made
its 1998 Texas Music Educators Association convention debut with Andre
Thomas under its new name, Texas Two-Year College Choral Festival. The
Festival was a homeless orphan no longer; San Antonio and TMEA invited
TTCCF to join the family.
The 2000 TMEA convention was a milestone for the Festival Choir
and its directors. Under the masterful leadership of Dr. Jerry McCoy,
TTCCF
presented
a
fine concert that culminated with a commissioned work, “Ring Out
Wild Bells,” by Michael Cox. The nearly nine-minute piece was a
celebration of the new century and new millennium, calling for an end
to war and strife with twentieth-century harmonies, shifting meters,
and dramatic, fluctuating tempos accompanied by brass, percussion, and
keyboard. With this achievement, the directors agreed that the choir
had grown to a new level, and TTCCF adopted its current name, Texas Two-Year
College All-State Choir.